I thrive off feedback and welcome your questions. I'm particularly keen to help people overcome their fear of travel, and give friendly advice on overcoming complacency and how to get jobs anywhere in the world. So please get in contact with your questions and.
F.A.Q.
1. What is Independent Travel?
The best way to define independent travel is to say what it’s not – it’s not tourism. Tourism means short breaks and all the details of where you’ll stay and what you’ll do have usually been organised in advance. Independent travel involves a much longer time-frame, up to a year (there are some people who travel indefinitely) and there is an element of chance in where you will stay and what you will do. Some people organise these details in advance while others, like me, play it by ear and go with the flow. My approach is to simply choose a place to go, carve out a chunk of time, get the money together, travel alone and don’t do too much research as I’ll find out everything I need to know (and more) after I get there. In this way independent travel is a mystery and a way of life.
In my view independent travel should be done alone. A lone traveller is easier to approach as opposed to a couple, and he/she will meet more people – but many people travel in couples or groups and that’s fine. It generally involves travelling to the other side of the world and spending as much time as possible getting to know it. But you can travel independently in your own country, by simply getting a rucksack and going camping. What’s essential for anyone who wants to do this is to build up the skills you will need to do it. See this article for more insights: 10 Skills for Independent Travellers.
2. Was it Easy to Become an Independent Traveller?
I didn’t plan to become an independent traveller, it just happened naturally. But I do remember being afraid of travelling alone and overcoming this fear was the key to getting away. I described this process of conquering my fears at the start of my first travel book: 9 Months in Tibet. Somewhere along the road I picked up a series of skills that I consider essential for anyone who wants to travel independently. These were things I learned gradually, with experience, and not from a book. If you really want to become something, if you have a burning ambition, and if you stay focused on it, you can make it happen whatever the odds.
3. Can You Advise People About Working Abroad?
Yes. I love talking to people about the future. Many young people seem worried about what they will do and, in my experience, school doesn’t equip them with the skills they need to evaluate the situation properly. The main thing that people need to navigate the job market (and life itself) is confidence. It’s all very well applying for a job but you may hate it and how do you know that you’re not a brilliant pastry chef, mechanic, artist or PR person?
My advice is simple: experience as many different jobs as you can between the ages of 16 and 30 – work in bars, kitchens, building sites, vans, offices and shops – and eventually you’ll work out what you want to do – and that is the point you should go to university and study your chosen subject. This will give you an overview of the job market, will help you relax, build confidence, take the right decisions and be a much more motivated student. Part of this process should be working abroad – all young people should try and get summer jobs in foreign countries, or volunteer postings, and the tourism industry everywhere needs charming young English-speakers like you (check out this article: Introduction to Working Abroad).
4. What Do I Do Now?
At the time of writing this (June 2026) I am gearing up to promote and sell my new travel book 12 Jobs in 12 Months.
Although I have a publisher (Stonebook Press) I'm doing all the sales and marketing and soon I will be sitting on a street somewhere, selling copies of the book directly to passers by. I call this book busking. If you're reading this you could really help by following this link and buying a copy.
Generally, I divide my time between writing (and organising) books in the early morning and doing physical jobs like gardening, painting and decorating for the rest of the day. That keeps the wolf from the door. My aim in doing those jobs, apart from earning a crust, is to help people. When I go into a job with the intention of helping someone out it makes it really motivating.
If you'd like to know what I used to do, have a look at my profile/CV page. I think my work history is quite interesting and I'm proud of it.
5. Should I Travel Before Getting a Career?
In my view the best time to travel independently is before you get stuck into a steady job as this tends to result in lifetime commitments, marriage, kids, mortgages--and these are all hard to get away from. I know it’s not easy to hit the road after school or university but it’s a lot easier than it would be later on in life. But the same fears -- travelling alone, getting lost, running out of money, getting robbed, ruining your chances for a career -- face anyone considering independent travel, whatever their age. And then there is complacency, the difficulty of getting away from the comfort of your own home. These obstacles are harder to overcome than getting the money together -- and what I’m saying is that the older and more settled you get the harder it is to travel independently.
Another consideration is that independent travel, and getting a short term job abroad, may well result in you getting into a completely different career. I never would have imagined that I’d be working as a PR consultant--and if I hadn't got caught up in a riot in Tibet this opportunity would never have opened up for me. It was easier for me to work abroad when the UK was part of the EU, but there are still plenty of ways of getting hired abroad. "Where there's a will there's a way!"
6. Is Travel a Way of Life?
Independent travel can certainly be a way of life and there are people who travel indefinitely. If you can adapt to foreign cultures, if you can handle missing home occasionally, if you thrive on being alone and in strange places -- independent travel could be for you.
7. What's Your Latest Book
It's called 12 Jobs in 12 Months and I summarise it thus: "A travel book, a memoir, a cast of characters, a collection of sometimes farcical stories. Designed and published by Jim Hutcheson (Stonebook Press) in July 2026".
8. Can I Get 12 Jobs in 12 Months in a Bookshop?
My latest book should be available in all UK bookshops, via Scottish Book Source and Gardners, and please let me know if it's not.
The best way to get a copy is to order it from me (here) as then I actually make some money on it. When copies are sold via bookshops I barely make anything as they take such big commissions.
9. Is 12 Jobs in 12 Months Available as an eBook?
Yes. 12 Jobs in 12 Months is available as an ebook on Amazon and it only costs £1.99. Here's the link.
10. Will you Give a Talk at our Event?
I really like giving talks at events, schools, universities, festivals and book clubs – so check out this page/video and get in touch.
Please send me more questions I can answer here
Updated June 2026
